H2O Tea by induction
The tea ceremony brought back into the modern age
H2O Tea by induction
Bachelor Thesis | Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft Berlin
DMY Berlin Special mention
LAVA Design Award - Nominee - Newcomer - ArtDesign Feldkirch/POTENTIALe
Smow.com Blog post
Role: Lead Designer: Industrial Design, Prototyping, Ethnographic Research, Consumer Study, Material Research, User Research, Industry Interviews | Patent
Tool: Turnery, 3D Printing, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, Rhino, Cinema 4D, Adobe InDesign, Keyshot
The research phase included ethnographic, anthropological, material and user research and looked into the philosophy of drinking, as well as sketches and form investigation.
Scandinavian and Asian archetypes fused with the latest technological innovations
Prototyping phase of 3 weeks including 3D printing & turnery.
The final prototype in the kitchen - it can hold up to 1L, so two to three cups of tea.
The features:
An ode to physics & materials, anthropology & sustainability, the ceremony and the modern lifestyle.
As seen on smow.com:
For her graduation project at the Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft Berlin Marta Suslow investigated a possible alternative, a teapot in which one boils the water directly.
Featuring a cast iron body with wooden handle and lid Marta’s TeapotKettle, as we alone are calling it, harnesses the power of induction to bring the water to the boil, once the water has boiled a teabag can be placed inside the TeapotKettle and the object taken to your living room/garden/bedroom/wherever you want to enjoy your tea.
It’s that simple.
We say reject that concession to tea fetishists, yes white tea may greatly appreciate a water temperature of exactly 83.8 degrees Celsius. Guess. Boil the water, let it cool for a couple of minutes, it’ll be fine. In addition, by remaining with the cast iron body and wooden lid you keep the design as low tech and simple as possible which creates a nice harmony with and tribute to the traditional Japanese Tetsubin, a delightful piece of functional utilitarian craftsmanship. And not an object we’ve ever come across with an LED display.
Although on the one hand about updating the process by which tea is made, utilizing contemporary technology to make a traditional process more efficient, H20 – Tea by induction by Marta Suslow is also about creating a unity of culture between domestic space and kitchen and about improving the aesthetics of everyday objects to make our lives more pleasurable.
A combination of factors which makes us wonder why Wilhelm Wagenfeld never came up with such an idea.
Obviously not everyone is going to like Marta Suslow’s project, potters for example will fear the death of the valuable teapot trade; however, for our part we find the idea not only charming and intriguing but a very nice piece of design research.
The final kettle